Intertestamental books include the deuterocanonical books as an intertestamental section between the Old Testament and New Testament; they are termed the "
Apocrypha" in many Protestant Churches. , listing "The Books of the Old Testament", "The Books called Apocrypha", and "The Books of the New Testament". During the
Apostolic Age many Jewish texts of Hellenistic origin existed within Judaism and were frequently used by Christians. Patristic authorities frequently recognized these books as important to the emergence of Christianity, but the inspired authority and value of the apocrypha remained widely disputed. Christians included several of these books in the canons of the
Christian Bibles, calling them the "apocrypha" or the "hidden books". In the sixteenth century, during the Protestant
Reformation, the canonical validity of the intertestamental books was challenged and
fourteen books were classed in 80 book Protestant Bibles as an intertestamental section called the Apocrypha, which straddles the Old Testament and New Testament. Prior to 1629, all English-language Protestant Bibles included the Old Testament, Apocrypha, and New Testament; examples include the "
Matthew's Bible (1537), the
Great Bible (1539), the
Geneva Bible (1560), the
Bishop's Bible (1568), and the
King James Bible (1611)".
Fourteen out of eighty biblical books comprise the Protestant Apocrypha, first published as such in Luther's Bible (1534). Many of these texts are considered
canonical Old Testament books by the Catholic Church, affirmed by the
Council of Rome (AD 382) and later reaffirmed by the
Council of Trent (1545–63); all of the books of the Protestant Apocrypha are considered canonical by the Eastern Orthodox Church and are referred to as
anagignoskomena per the
Synod of Jerusalem (1672). The
Lutheran Churches normatively include in the Bible the Apocrypha as an intertestamental section between the Old Testament and the New Testament; the systematic theologian
Martin Chemnitz, a leading figure in the development of Evangelical Lutheranism "separated Scripture into two categories: those from which the Church makes doctrine and those from which the Church does not." The
Book of Concord, the compendium of Evangelical Lutheran doctrine, quotes passages from the Apocrypha/Deuterocanon.
Anabaptists use the
Luther Bible, which contains the intertestamental books;
Amish wedding ceremonies include "the retelling of the marriage of Tobias and Sarah in the Apocrypha". The
Anglican Communion accepts the Protestant Apocrypha "for instruction in life and manners, but not for the establishment of doctrine (Article VI in the
Thirty-Nine Articles)", and many "lectionary readings in
The Book of Common Prayer are taken from the Apocrypha", with these lessons being "read in the same ways as those from the Old Testament". The first
Methodist liturgical book,
The Sunday Service of the Methodists, employs verses from the Apocrypha, such as in the Eucharistic liturgy. The Protestant Apocrypha contains three books (1 Esdras, 2 Esdras and the Prayer of Manasseh) that are accepted by many Eastern Orthodox Churches and Oriental Orthodox Churches as canonical, but are regarded as non-canonical by the Catholic Church and are therefore not included in modern Catholic Bibles. In the 1800s, the
British and Foreign Bible Society did not regularly publish the intertestamental section in its Bibles, citing the cost of printing the Apocrypha in addition to the Old Testament and New Testament as a major factor; this legacy came to characterize English-language Bibles in Great Britain and the Americas, unlike in Europe where Protestant Bibles are printed with 80 books in three sections: the Old Testament, Apocrypha, and New Testament. In the present-day, "English Bibles with the Apocrypha are becoming more popular again", usually being printed as
intertestamental books. The status of the deuterocanonicals remains unchanged in Catholic and Orthodox Christianity, though there is a difference in number of these books between these two branches of Christianity. Some authorities began using term
deuterocanonical to refer to this traditional intertestamental collection as books of "the second canon". These books are often seen as helping to explain the theological and cultural transitions that took place between the Old and New Testaments. They are also sometimes called "intertestamental" by religious groups who do not recognize
Hellenistic Judaism as belonging with either Jewish or Christian testaments. Slightly varying collections of apocryphal, deuterocanonical or intertestamental books of the Bible form part of the
Catholic,
Eastern Orthodox and
Oriental Orthodox canons. The deuterocanonical or intertestamental books of the Catholic Church include Tobit, Judith, Baruch, Sirach, 1 Maccabees, 2 Maccabees, Wisdom and additions to Esther, Daniel, and Baruch. The
Book of Enoch is included in the biblical canon of the
Oriental Orthodox churches of Ethiopia and Eritrea. The
Epistle of Jude alludes to a story in the book of Enoch, and some believe the use of this book also appears in the four gospels and
1 Peter. While
Jesus and his disciples sometimes used phrases also featured in some of the Apocryphal books, the Book of Enoch was never referenced by Jesus. The genuineness and inspiration of Enoch were believed in by the writer of the
Epistle of Barnabas,
Irenaeus,
Tertullian and
Clement of Alexandria Martin Luther, like
Jerome, favored the
Masoretic canon for the Old Testament, excluding apocryphal books in the
Luther Bible as unworthy to be properly called scripture, but included most of them in a separate section. Luther did not include the
deuterocanonical books in his Old Testament, terming them "Apocrypha, that are books which are not considered equal to the Holy Scriptures, but are useful and good to read." The
Eastern Orthodox Church accepts four other books into its canon than what are contained in the Catholic canon:
Psalm 151, the
Prayer of Manasseh,
3 Maccabees, and
1 Esdras.
Disputes The status of the books that the Catholic Church terms
Deuterocanonicals (second canon) and Protestantism refers to as
Apocrypha has been an issue of disagreement that preceded the Reformation. Many believe that the pre-Christian-era Jewish translation (into Greek) of holy scriptures known as the
Septuagint, a Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures originally compiled around 280 BC, originally included the apocryphal writings in dispute, with little distinction made between them and the rest of the
Old Testament. Others argue that the Septuagint of the first century did not contain these books but they were added later by Christians. The earliest extant manuscripts of the Septuagint are from the fourth century, and suffer greatly from a lack of uniformity as regards containing apocryphal books, and some also contain books classed as
pseudepigrapha, from which texts were cited by some early writers in the second and later centuries as being scripture. it is generally considered not to have been finalized until about 100 AD or somewhat later, at which time considerations of Greek language and beginnings of Christian acceptance of the Septuagint weighed against some of the texts. Some were not accepted by the Jews as part of the
Hebrew Bible canon and the Apocrypha is not part of the historical Jewish canon. Early church fathers such as
Athanasius,
Melito,
Origen, and
Cyril of Jerusalem, spoke against the canonicity of much or all of the apocrypha, but the most weighty opposition was the fourth century Catholic scholar
Jerome who preferred the Hebrew canon, whereas Augustine and others preferred the wider (Greek) canon, with both having followers in the generations that followed. The
Catholic Encyclopedia states as regards the Middle Ages, The prevailing attitude of Western medieval authors is substantially that of the Greek Fathers. The wider Christian canon accepted by Augustine became the more established canon in the western Church after being promulgated for use in the Easter Letter of Athanasius (circa 372 A.D.), the Synod of Rome (382 A.D., but its
Decretum Gelasianum is generally considered to be a much later addition) and the local councils of Carthage and Hippo in north Africa (391 and 393 A.D). Athanasius called canonical all books of the Hebrew Bible including Baruch, while excluding Esther. He adds that "there are certain books which the Fathers had appointed to be read to catechumens for edification and instruction; these are the Wisdom of Solomon, the Wisdom of Sirach (Ecclesiasticus), Esther, Judith, Tobias, the Didache, or Doctrine of the Apostles, and the Shepherd of Hermas. All others are apocrypha and the inventions of heretics (Festal Epistle for 367)". Nevertheless, none of these constituted indisputable definitions, and significant scholarly doubts and disagreements about the nature of the Apocrypha continued for centuries and even into Trent, which provided the first infallible definition of the Catholic canon in 1546. In the 16th century, the Protestant reformers challenged the canonicity of the books and partial-books found in the surviving Septuagint but not in the
Masoretic Text. In response to this challenge, after the death of Martin Luther (February 8, 1546) the ecumenical
Council of Trent officially ("infallibly") declared these books (called "deuterocanonical" by Catholics) to be part of the canon in April, 1546 A.D. While the Protestant Reformers rejected the parts of the canon that were not part of the
Hebrew Bible, they included the four New Testament books Luther considered of doubtful canonicity along with the Apocrypha in his non-binding
Luther's canon (although most were separately included in his Bible, as they were in some editions of the KJV bible until 1947). Protestantism therefore established a 66 book canon with the 39 books based on the ancient Hebrew canon, along with the traditional 27 books of the New Testament. Protestants also rejected the Catholic term "deuterocanonical" for these writings, preferring to apply the term "apocryphal", which was already in use for other early and disputed writings. As today (but along with other reasons), some of which are accepted as canonical by Eastern Orthodox and some other churches. Protestants accept none of these additional books as canon, but see them having roughly the same status as the other Apocrypha.
Eastern Orthodoxy uses a different definition than the Roman Catholic Church does for the books of its canon that it calls
deuterocanonical, referring to them as a class of books with less authority than other books of the Old Testament. In contrast, the
Catholic Church uses this term to refer to a class of books that were added to its canon later than the other books in its Old Testament canon, considering them all of equal authority.
New Testament apocrypha New Testament apocrypha—books similar to those in the
New Testament but almost universally rejected by Catholics, Orthodox and Protestants—include several gospels and lives of apostles. Some were written by early Jewish Christians (see the
Gospel according to the Hebrews). Others of these were produced by
Gnostic authors or members of other groups later defined as
heterodox. Many texts believed lost for centuries were unearthed in the 19th and 20th centuries, producing lively speculation about their importance in early
Christianity among religious scholars, while many others survive only in the form of quotations from them in other writings; for some, no more than the title is known. Artists and theologians have drawn upon the New Testament apocrypha for such matters as the names of
Dismas and
Gestas and details about the
Three Wise Men. The first explicit mention of the
perpetual virginity of Mary is found in the
pseudepigraphical Infancy Gospel of James. Before the fifth century, the Christian writings that were then under discussion for inclusion in the canon but had not yet been accepted were classified in a group known as the ancient
antilegomenae. These were all candidates for the New Testament and included several books that were eventually accepted, such as:
The Epistle to the Hebrews,
2 Peter,
3 John and the
Revelation of John (Apocalypse). None of those accepted books can be considered Apocryphal now, since all Christendom accepts them as canonical. Of the uncanonized ones, the Early Church considered some heretical but viewed others quite positively. The
Ethiopian Orthodox have in the past also included
I & II Clement and
Shepherd of Hermas in their
New Testament canon.
List of Sixty The List of Sixty, dating to around the 7th century, lists sixty books that the author claimed were the complete canonical scriptures. The unknown author also lists many apocryphal books that are not included amongst the sixty. These books are: •
Adam •
Enoch •
Lamech •
Twelve Patriarchs •
Prayer of Joseph •
Eldad and Modad •
Testament of Moses •
Assumption of Moses •
Psalms of Solomon •
Apocalypse of Elijah •
Ascension of Isaiah •
Apocalypse of Zephaniah •
Apocalypse of Zechariah •
Apocalyptic Ezra •
History of James •
Apocalypse of Peter •
Itinerary and Teaching of the Apostles •
Epistle of Barnabas •
Acts of Paul •
Apocalypse of Paul •
Didascalia of Clement •
Didascalia of Ignatius •
Didascalia of Polycarp •
Gospel of Barnabas • Gospel According to Matthew ==Islam==